KnE Social Sciences

ISSN: 2518-668X

The latest conference proceedings on humanities, arts and social sciences.

Deixis in the Song Lyrics of One Direction

Published date:Mar 11 2021

Journal Title: KnE Social Sciences

Issue title: Annual International Conference on Language and Literature

Pages:582-591

DOI: 10.18502/kss.v5i4.8713

Authors:

Savitri Rahmadanysavitrirahmadany@gmail.comUniversitas Negeri Medan, Medan, Indonesia

Rahmad HuseinUniversitas Negeri Medan, Medan, Indonesia

Abstract:

This study aimed to investigate the types of deixis used in the song lyrics of One Direction, to find out the dominant types used and to describe the semantic meaning of the deixis. The song lyrics are associated with deixis since they express the singer’s or song writer’s feelings or emotions represented by some expressions of human thoughts, ideas and opinions. This study was conducted using a descriptive qualitative research design. The data were obtained from five songs of One Direction entitled Up All Night, Change My Mind, Everything about You, Little Things, and Right Now. Three types of deixis were found in the five songs and there were 108 deixis found in the lyrics. Person deixis was investigated as the most dominant type used in the lyrics. All deixis had their semantic meanings based on the situations of the songs.

Keywords: Deixis, Song, Lyrics, Semantics

References:

[1] Anderson. S. R. and Keenan E. R. (1985). Deixis in Language Typology and Syntactic Description. In T. Shopen (Ed.), Grammatical Categories and the Lexicon. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

[2] Creswell, J. W. (2014). Research Design, Qualitatives, Quantitative, and Mixed Methods Approcahes (4th ed.). New York: Sage Publications.

[3] Cruse, D. A. (2006). A Glossary of Semantic and Pragmatic. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 126-127.

[4] Lyons, J. (1977). Linguistic Semantics an Introduction. New York: Cambridge University Press.

[5] Miles, M. B., A. M. Huberman, and J. Saldana. (2014). Qualitative Data Analysis. New York: Sage.

[6] Saeed, J. I. (2009). Semantics (3rd ed.). London: Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

[7] Widdowson, H. G. (1996). Linguistics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

[8] Yule, G. (2010). The Study of Language (4th ed.). New York: Cambridge University Press.

Download
HTML
Cite
Share
statistics

2554 Abstract Views

742 PDF Downloads